1.Evidence mapping of clinical research on 35 commonly used oral Chinese patent medicines in treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage.
Wen ZHANG ; Jun-Jie JIANG ; Yong-Qing MA ; Qiao-Feng LI ; Xing LIAO ; Cheng-Yu WU
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2025;50(2):555-568
Evidence mapping was used to systematically analyze the clinical research evidence of oral Chinese patent medicines in the treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage(ICH), thus revealing the distribution and quality of evidence in this field. The relevant articles were retrieved from CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, SinoMed, PubMed, EMbase, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science from inception to July 5, 2024. The distribution characteristics of evidence were presented numerically and graphically. A total of 35 Chinese patent medicines were identified, involving 261 articles. The basic information of the 35 Chinese patent medicines, publication trend, traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) syndromes, interventions, and outcome indicators were compared and analyzed, and the methodological quality of the articles was evaluated. The results indicated that the clinical scope of Chinese patent medicines in the treatment of ICH was broad. However, the available studies inadequately emphasized the advantages and characteristics of TCM, lacked the safety information and the standards for evaluating outcome indicators, and paid insufficient attention to cognitive ability and neuropsychology. In addition, these articles demonstrated low quality. It is recommended that follow-up clinical research should be standardized and highlight the characteristics of TCM. In the analysis of outcome indicators, TCM syndrome evaluation should be taken as an important outcome indicator, and the evaluation criteria should be unified. Moreover, more attention should be paid to patients' cognitive ability and neuropsychology. The holder of marketing license of Chinese patent medicines should standardize the clinical position and improve the safety information in the medicine instructions according to the relevant requirements of the National Medical Products Administration. Additionally, the proportion of Chinese patent medicines in the category A list of medical insurance should be increased, and the limited medical resources should be rationally allocated.
Cerebral Hemorrhage/drug therapy*
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Humans
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Nonprescription Drugs/administration & dosage*
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Administration, Oral
2.Development strategy of stomatology industry.
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2025;57(5):817-820
Stomatology is a first-level discipline mainly focusing on maintaining and promoting oral health, as well as preventing and treating diseases of oral and maxillofacial system. Through the great efforts of generations of stomatologists, China's stomatologic causes has achieved remarkable results and rapid development. The number of stomatologists has reached 334 000, and the ratio of stomatologists to the population is 1:4 600, which have made China a major country in stomatology. However, compared with developed countries, there is still a considerable gap in the overall oral health level of our people. Strengthen the construction of stomatologist team, especially the training of stomatologists at the basis level; Optimize medical education in stomatology and improve the quality of graduates; Strengthen primary oral care and lay a solid foundation for oral care service; Regulate private dental institutions and strengthen their construction; Popularize knowledge about oral health, enhance public awareness of oral health, and improve public oral health behaviors; Give full play to the leading role of new ideas, knowledge and technologies in stomatology is a key link in developing stomatology and building a strong country in stomatology.
Oral Medicine/organization & administration*
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Humans
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China
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Oral Health
3.Artificial intelligence in stomatology: Innovations in clinical practice, research, education, and healthcare management.
Xuliang DENG ; Mingming XU ; Chenlin DU
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2025;57(5):821-826
In recent years, China has continued to face a high prevalence of oral diseases, along with uneven access to high-quality dental care. Against this backdrop, artificial intelligence (AI), as a data-driven, algorithm-supported, and model-centered technology system, has rapidly expanded its role in transforming the landscape of stomatology. This review summarizes recent advances in the application of AI in stomatology across clinical care, biomedical and materials research, education, and hospital management. In clinical settings, AI has improved diagnostic accuracy, streamlined treatment planning, and enhanced surgical precision and efficiency. In research, machine learning has accelerated the identification of disease biomarkers, deepened insights into the oral microbiome, and supported the development of novel biomaterials. In education, AI has enabled the construction of knowledge graphs, facilitated personalized learning, and powered simulation-based training, driving innovation in teaching methodologies. Meanwhile, in hospital operations, intelligent agents based on large language models (LLMs) have been widely deployed for intelligent triage, structured pre-consultations, automated clinical documentation, and quality control, contributing to more standardized and efficient healthcare delivery. Building on these foundations, a multi-agent collaborative framework centered around an AI assistant for stomatology is gradually emerging, integrating task-specific agents for imaging, treatment planning, surgical navigation, follow-up prediction, patient communication, and administrative coordination. Through shared interfaces and unified knowledge systems, these agents support seamless human-AI collaboration across the full continuum of care. Despite these achievements, the broader deployment of AI still faces challenges including data privacy, model robustness, cross-institution generalization, and interpretability. Addressing these issues will require the development of federated learning frameworks, multi-center validation, causal reasoning approaches, and strong ethical governance. With these foundations in place, AI is poised to move from a supportive tool to a trusted partner in advancing accessible, efficient, and high-quality stomatology services in China.
Artificial Intelligence
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Humans
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Oral Medicine/trends*
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China
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Delivery of Health Care
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Machine Learning
4.Application progress of collagen membranes in oral medicine.
Yiqin WANG ; Junliang WEN ; Xinhang YU ; Jun CHEN ; Wenjie LI
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2025;50(6):1088-1098
Collagen membrane has attracted much attention from researchers due to its excellent properties such as wide source, degradable absorption, and low immunogenicity. However, they are limited by poor mechanical stability and rapid degradation. To enhance their physicochemical properties and biological functions, researchers have developed various strategies, including cross-linking, incorporation of growth factors or drugs, combination with other biomaterials, optimization of composition and structure, and substitution with marine-derived collagen. These advances aim to expand the clinical applications of collagen membranes in oral medicine. With the urgent demand for high-performance biomaterials in oral medicine, summarizing recent progress on collagen membranes provides valuable insights into their mechanisms, clinical efficacy, and limitations, offering reference for optimized design and broader clinical use. Furthermore, further trends may include integrating advanced manufacturing technologies to develop personalized collagen membranes, which could significantly improve therapeutic outcomes in oral diseases.
Collagen/therapeutic use*
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Humans
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Biocompatible Materials/chemistry*
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Membranes, Artificial
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Oral Medicine/methods*
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Tissue Engineering/methods*
5.Methodological quality of systematic reviews on orally administered Chinese herbal medicine published in Chinese between 2021 and 2022: A cross-sectional study.
Yue JIANG ; Claire Chenwen ZHONG ; Betty Huan WANG ; Shan-Shan XU ; Fai Fai HO ; Ming Hong KWONG ; Leonard HO ; Joson Hao-Shen ZHOU ; K C LAM ; Jian-Ping LIU ; Bao-Ting ZHANG ; Vincent Chi Ho CHUNG
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2025;23(5):492-501
OBJECTIVE:
This cross-sectional study assessed the methodological quality of systematic reviews (SRs) of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) published in Chinese between Jan 2021 and Sep 2022.
METHODS:
Chinese language CHM SRs were identified through literature searches across 3 international and 4 Chinese databases. Methodological quality was appraised using A MeaSurement Tool to Assess systematic Reviews 2. Logistic regressions were used to explore associations between bibliographical characteristics and quality.
RESULTS:
Analyses of methodological quality found that among the 213 sampled SRs, 69.5% were of critically low quality, 30.5% were of low quality, and none achieved high or moderate quality. Common shortcomings included the failure to identify the studies excluded from the analysis, failure to disclose funding sources, and limited evaluation of the potential impact of bias on conclusions. Logistic regressions revealed that SRs led by corresponding authors affiliated with universities or academic institutions tended to be of lower quality than SRs led by authors affiliated with hospitals or clinical facilities.
CONCLUSION
Recent Chinese language CHM SRs exhibited limited methodological quality, making them unlikely to support the development of clinical practice guidelines. Urgent initiatives are needed to enhance training for researchers, peer-reviewers and editors involved in the preparation and publication of SRs. Adoption of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses reporting guidelines in Chinese language journals is crucial to improve the relevance of SRs for Chinese medicine development. Addressing deficiencies in methodology and reporting is essential for promoting evidence-based practices and informed clinical decisions in Chinese medicine. Please cite this article as: Jiang Y, Zhong CC, Wang BH, Xu SS, Ho FF, Kwong MH, Ho L, Zhou JHS, Lam KC, Liu JP, Zhang BT, Chung VCH. Methodological quality of systematic reviews on orally administered Chinese herbal medicine published in Chinese between 2021 and 2022: A cross-sectional study. J Integr Med. 2025; 23(5):492-501.
Cross-Sectional Studies
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/administration & dosage*
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Systematic Reviews as Topic/standards*
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Humans
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China
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Administration, Oral
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
6.Formation of professor Mao Xiejun's thoughts on stomatological education.
Yan Hua SHAN ; Qi CHEN ; Quan JING ; Da Qing ZHANG ; Yong Sheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2023;58(2):174-179
Professor Mao Xiejun wrote a report about dental education of China in 1935. From 1948 to 1950, he published three articles containing the educational idea of "developing dentistry into stomatology". When he served as the director of the Faculty of Dentistry of Peking University Medical School in July 1950, he proposed to rename the Faculty of Dentistry into the Faculty of Stomatology,which were approved by the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China in one month. The Chinese Medical Association established the Society of Stomatology the next year. Later, dentistry was successively changed into stomatology, and medical content was integrated into dental education, which was of great significance and far-reaching influence. During the developments of the thought of stomatological education in China, Professor Mao Xiejun evidently played a pivotal role. In this paper, the formation process of the thoughts of stomatological education related to professor Mao Xiejun's contribution is elucidated through studying the archives, personal letters, and historical documents, so as to enrich the researches on the history of stomatology in China and to facilitate better understanding and promoting the development of stomatology.
Humans
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Oral Medicine/education*
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Education, Dental
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China
;
Universities
7.Literature review and prospect on oral cognition and disease diagnosis and treatment between Han and Tang dynasties.
Qin GAO ; Mengdi ZHU ; Jiabo WANG ; Songling WANG ; Jian ZHOU ; Jingqiu ZHANG
West China Journal of Stomatology 2023;41(5):604-612
Chinese medicine entered a significant period from foundation to maturity between Han and Tang dynasties when the Chinese traditional stomatology was a key stage. Sorting and analysis of existing literature and research outcomes have showed that current research on stomatology between Han and Tang dynasties focuses on oral physiology, pathology, diagnosis and treatment, and health care. It also involves stomatology history and explanation of termino-logies related to mouth and teeth recorded in medical books, use of simple methods, and thinking with citation and analysis of literature simply listed and reasoning preliminarily deducted. From the macro perspective, current research has not unveiled the whole picture of stomatology between the two dynasties and left a series of key issues unresolved. Thus, new methods should be developed and employed to carry out medical research on stomatology between Han and Tang dynasties given that is has a prosperous future.
Mouth
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Oral Medicine
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Cognition
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China
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
8.Current status and future prospects of stomatology research.
Qianming CHEN ; Yahui WANG ; Jing SHUAI
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2023;24(10):853-867
Research in stomatology (dental medicine) continues to expand globally and is oriented towards solving clinical issues, focusing on clarifying the clinical relevance and potential mechanisms of oral-systemic connections via clinical epidemiology, oral microecological characterization, and the establishment of animal models. Interdisciplinary integration of materials science and tissue engineering with stomatology is expected to lead to the creation of innovative materials and technologies to better resolve the most prevalent and challenging clinical issues such as peri-implantitis, soft and hard tissue defects, and dentin hypersensitivity. With the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI), 5th generation mobile communication technology (5G), and big data applications, "intelligent stomatology" is emerging to build models for better clinical diagnosis and management, accelerate the reform of education, and support the growth and advancement of scientific research. Here, we summarized the current research status, and listed the future prospects and limitations of these three aspects, aiming to provide a basis for more accurate etiological exploration, novel treatment methods, and abundant big data analysis in stomatology to promote the translation of research achievements into practical applications for both clinicians and the public.
Animals
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Oral Medicine
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Artificial Intelligence
9.Current application and limitations of augmented reality in the stomatology.
Yan Xue XU ; Ming Rui ZHANG ; Li FU
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2023;58(6):592-597
Computer-assisted technology are gradually integrated into dental education and clinical treatment. As a cutting-edge technology in computer-aided medicine, augmented reality can not only be used as an aid to dental education by presenting three-dimensional scenes for teaching demonstration and experimental skills training, but also can superimpose virtual image information of patients onto real lesion areas for real-time feedback and intraoperative navigation. This review explores the current applications and limitations of augmented reality in dentistry to provide a reference for future research.
Humans
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Augmented Reality
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Oral Medicine
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Surgery, Computer-Assisted/methods*
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Imaging, Three-Dimensional
10.Brief analysis of research and application status of artificial intelligence and related advanced technology in oral medicine.
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2023;58(6):505-513
Artificial intelligence revealed its application prospects that could bring change in oral medicine. Artificial intelligence related papers in oral medicine field increased year by year since the 1990s. In order to provide reference for further research, the literature on artificial intelligence studies and its application in oral medicine were retrieved from multiple databases and summarized. The evolution of hot spots on artificial intelligence and related state of the art technology in oral medicine were analyzed.
Artificial Intelligence
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Databases, Factual
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Oral Medicine
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Technology
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Humans

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